Episerver uses standard ASP.NET mechanisms for password handling, which lets you configure things like password complexity policies. You also can configure Episerver to use Windows or Active Directory for authentication, meaning that password changes and lock-out policy is delegated.

You should have strong password complexity requirements on user accounts and ensure that any changes to user accounts involves the user’s current password. You also can use a different Membership provider for Episerver that does not allow for password change. Either subclassing the SqlServerMembershipProvider or using the ActiveDirectoryMembership provider work equally well.

See the following Microsoft references for information about managing membership accounts.

Cross-site request forgery (CSRF) and reflected cross-site scripting

In Episerver, you can address CSRF issues by using an HTTPS/SSL layer to block anyone else from replaying a request because they do not have access to its contents.

Ineffective session termination

Episerver uses standard ASP.NET mechanisms for authentication which does not support active logout, and it is basically sessionless. You might extend ASP.NET, but that is not a feature provided by Episerver. You should use HTTPS for secure communication, because this does not let third parties sniff the session token.

You can extend ASP.NET's FormsAuthentication ticket with active logout, but that is not a feature provided by Episerver.

Header disclosure

Through the use of IIS and ASP.NET, some informational HTTP headers are added to a response, which might expose security-releated information like ASP.NET and IIS versions. You can modify this using standard ASP.NET techniques; it is not specific to Episerver and should be dealt with as part of standard application hardening. You can remove the X-AspNetMvc-Version header with a simple set of the MvcHandler.DisableMvcResponseHeader property.

Disabling of autocomplete

You should build a custom login page with auto-complete disabled, replacing the default login page. Forms containing user names and passwords, or other sensitive information, should have the autocomplete option disabled on both the form and the sensitive fields.

Vulnerability to clickjacking attacks

You can avoid clickjacking attacks on websites by ensuring that content is not embedded into other sites using frames. Use the X-Frame-Options HTTP response header to defend against clickjacking attacks. This header indicates that the current page should not be loaded in a frame, and through code you can blank the contents of the page if it is framed by another domain.